Work Truck Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Defensive Driving Techniques For Commercial Motor Vehicle Drivers

Follow these techniques avoid traffic accidents and injuries while operating a commercial motor vehicle.

by Louis Prejean
July 14, 2021
Defensive Driving Techniques For Commercial Motor Vehicle Drivers

 

Photo: Unsplash/Yassine Khalfalli

4 min to read


Professional drivers are frequently asked to adjust to bad driving behaviors of other drivers. They stay focused on the driving task at hand and react professionally. Lives depend on these defensive driving techniques. These techniques were provided by the Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance.

  1. Always Wear Your Seat Belt

Ad Loading...

In the U.S., motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of occupational deaths. Truck drivers are accounted for almost half of those fatalities. The risk for injury increases if commercial vehicle drivers do not use their seat belt. The seat belt is the most impactful way to decrease the number of injuries and save lives.

  1. Be Aware of Driving Conditions

There are always changing weather conditions and traffic congestion. Professional drivers must have the ability to prepare and stay aware of these conditions while on the road. Slow down when faced with these conditions. Professional drivers are suggested to reduce their speed by more than half on snow-packed roads and reduce their speed even more on icy roads. Pull off into a safe location if it is no longer safe to drive in these conditions.

  1. Don’t Speed

Speeding is one of the main reasons for traffic accidents today. Respect the laws and other drivers by not speeding.

Ad Loading...
  1. Do Not Focus on Non-Driving Objects

Professional drivers must keep their eyes on the road. They must focus on the potential road hazards they may face and limit glances away from the road to one second or less.

  1. You Can’t Fight Fatigue

Pull off to the side of the road into a safe location if you are a professional driver experiencing signs of fatigue. Quality sleep is important. A high number of single vehicle rollovers are credited to drivers falling asleep while driving.

  1. Search As You Drive

Ad Loading...

Professional drivers are encouraged to always observe the road in front, the sides and the rear of their vehicle. Look for any potential moving and fixed road hazards and watch for brake lights. Brake lights can signal hazards. Drivers must also anticipate possible traffic conditions.

  1. Be Careful When Backing

Professional drivers should observe the GOAL (Get Out And Look) when backing their vehicle. Do not back the vehicle until the path is clear of any person or obstacle. Check mirrors when backing, too.

  1. Maintain Your Lane of Travel

It is important to maintain the lane of travel for professional drivers due to the size of the vehicle. They can determine lane changes and exits by searching far enough ahead on the roadway. Professional drivers must always allow a four-second following distance and signal their intention to change lanes. Double the following distance if there is inclement weather.

Ad Loading...
  1. Be Aware of the “No Zones”

“No Zones” are the locations where professional drivers cannot see or hazards to the front, right, left and rear of their vehicle. Professional drivers must check their side mirrors for other vehicles entering this area. They must also pay attention to vehicles that are tailgating.

  1. Enter Curves Slowly

There are certain capabilities of a vehicle to keep in mind while driving. Drivers must know the load they are transporting, too. Therefore, it is important to slow down when approaching curves in the roadway. Pay attention to speed limits when entering a curve.

  1. Plan Your Route Before You Leave

Ad Loading...

It is dangerous to remove one or both hands while driving to program your GPS. Enter the information into the GPS before starting the trip.

  1. Turn Your Cell Phone Off While Driving

Professional drivers know that driving is the task at hand. According to CVSA, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs) do not allow texting or the use of a hand-held electronic device while operating a commercial motor vehicle.

  1. Avoid Distractions While Driving

There are three types of driving distractions professional drivers must avoid. The first is a manual distraction. Manual distractions occur when drivers remove one or both hands off the steering wheel. The second type of distraction is visual. This is when drivers take their eyes off the roadway. Cognitive distractions are the third type drivers should avoid. These distractions take a driver’s mental attention away from driving. Anger, anxiety and fatigue are a few examples of cognitive distractions.

Ad Loading...
  1. Medications May Affect Your Driving Abilities

Prescription and over-the-counter medications may affect a professional driver’s ability to operate a commercial motor vehicle. A driver must know the side effects of their medications. It is prohibited to use amphetamines or methamphetamines while driving a commercial motor vehicle, according to the CVSA.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Safety

Futuristic image of tractor trailer and sensors detecting a car it is approaching at dusk.
Safetyby News/Media ReleaseApril 24, 2026

Freightliner Expands Detroit Assurance Safety Features for Cascadia

Detroit Assurance with Active Break Assist 6 (ABA6) will be standard on Freightliner Cascadias built starting in December 2026 and will feature Cross Traffic Assist and Active Side Guard Assist 2 with left turn protection.

Read More →
Side view of a man in a truck cab with overlay of logo for LightMetrics.
Safetyby Wayne ParhamApril 22, 2026

LightMetrics Introduces ΦFP AI Layer Filter for Safety Alerts

LightMetrics has launched ΦFP, a new cloud AI layer that filters every driver safety alert before it reaches a fleet manager, eliminating the false alarms.

Read More →
A group of Atwell employees gather indoors for a team photo, standing together
Safetyby Lauren FletcherApril 21, 2026

What Fleets Can Learn from Listening to Drivers

What happens when drivers help shape specs, safety, and fleet programs? Atwell’s Crystal Zile shares how feedback led to smarter fleet decisions.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Man talking in front of a blue tinted background image of a large truck with logos for Truck Chat and Work Truck and yellow headline Detroit Assurance & Upfitting.
Safetyby Wayne ParhamApril 15, 2026

How Detroit Assurance Adapts to Unique Upfits

Mike Young, of Daimler Truck North America, will walk us through how Detroit Assurance safety systems can adapt to work around upfits that could block the radar or cameras.

Read More →
Pavement background with double yellow lines and large text that says Recall, April, and Work Truck logo.
Safetyby Wayne ParhamApril 9, 2026

Recalls You Need to Know About in April 2026

If you have Altec, Braun, Chrysler, Ford, General Motors, Hino, Mack Trucks, Mitsubishi Fuso, Orange EV, Terex, Toyota, or Volvo Trucks vehicles in your fleet, you should check these important recalls issued by the National Highway Safety Administration.

Read More →
Computer screenshot showing two graphics and an image of a man.
Safetyby News/Media ReleaseApril 8, 2026

Samsara Launches New AI Coaching Features to Transform Fleet Safety at Scale

Now, drivers have holistic coverage provided by Samsara Coach before, during, and after their shift. This includes start-of-the-day audio briefings to help predict road risk, on-the-road support through two-way audio coaching, and post-trip support through AI Avatar.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Background image of a rainy windshield and brake lights with logos for Truck Chat and Work Truck and a headline How Lytx Prepares Fleets for Severe Weather.
Safetyby Wayne ParhamApril 8, 2026

How Lytx Prepares Fleets for Severe Weather

Let’s learn more about how Lytx uses Dynamic Risk to provide real-time alerts, coaching, and operational support for fleets facing severe weather driving conditions. Brendon Hill, senior vice president of product at Lytx, walks us through how it all works.

Read More →
Darkened background image of congested traffic with large Nauto logo in front.
Safetyby News/Media ReleaseApril 2, 2026

Nauto Available as Order Now Partner on Geotab Marketplace

Nauto's AI-powered dash cam solutions are accessible via the Geotab Marketplace, enabling fleets to easily deploy its AI-enabled safety platform directly through Geotab.

Read More →
SponsoredApril 1, 2026

Future-Proofing Fleet Tech with Modular Mounting

Technology cycles move faster than vehicle rotations. Discover how modular mounting infrastructure protects your investment and reduces fleet-wide downtime.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
SponsoredMarch 30, 2026

Improving Jobsite Safety and Uptime with Advanced Driver-Assist Technology

Safer crews. Fewer incidents. Better uptime. Learn how driver-assist technology is changing the way vocational fleets operate.

Read More →